Slow down, life
You know how when it rains it pours? When you have one or two exciting things happening, you find that they seem to reproduce exponentially and leave you with a series of days so packed with STUFF that you don’t even have time to write it down.
So now I’m going to.
It’s been an absolutely stunning week or so. The first exciting thing that happened was when I walked into our lobby last week to find a thrilling basket of exotic spices from Bangkok waiting for me.
Paul the concierge smiled broadly. “This is for you from Gustavo and YSL; it is to go directly into your hands!” And so it did, with a handwritten note revealing that these great friends of ours were to be in town for a few days. It was but the work of a moment to get them to our house for dinner. With Elizabeth of course, who always adds her special brand of elegance to any get-together.
YSL brought the makings for a lovely starter which was new to me: white asparagus with finely chopped hard-boiled egg and pepper. It was a divinely simple and perfect dish, then followed by my favorite crab and goats cheese tart, always a winner.
Page 114 of Tonight at 7.30, if you please! For some reason it has been ages since I made this wonderful, light, crustless tart, and I’d forgotten how much I enjoyed the delicate flavors and texture. Now I’ve made it for three parties running and it will probably creep back to the shadows until I remember it again next spring, when for some reason crab comes to my mind.
What fun to have three such dynamic and different people around our table, each coming from such different places — Gustavo and YSL fresh from months in the Far East, Elizabeth happily lured from Barnes to SE1 for the evening. We moved on to a delectable apple and banana spice cake and some bananas that unsurprisingly didn’t flambe. That banana cake never disappoints.
(serves 8)
1 1/2 cups/180 g plain flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp each ground cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg
pinch sea salt
1/2 cup/113 g butter
2 eggs
1/2 tsp vanilla or 1 scraped vanilla pod
about 1 cup/2 average apples, chopped
about 1 cup/2 bananas, mashed
Combine all ingredients up to and including salt in a bowl. Cream butter, eggs and vanilla together and add to the flour mixture. Add fruit and stir thoroughly. Scrape into a buttered and floured round cake tin or loaf pan and bake at 350F/180C for about 45 minutes, or until center no longer jiggles. Serve warm.
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This is a simply awesome recipe, there are no two ways about it. I have accidentally discovered a wonderful little tweak, recently, through a typical Kristen baking error. A month or so ago, as I slipped the tin into the oven, I realised I had added absolutely no leavening. No baking soda or powder. What to do? I decided to let it go and see what happened. What happened was an absolutely brilliantly squidgy, dense fruit cake, very different from the fluffy, tall cake I had intended. My friends adored it. Childhood on a plate! Then I made it with just baking powder, and again with just baking soda, and the result was somewhere in between. Dense but not squidgy. So you may take your choice. They are all wonderful.
Monday evening brought ringing practice with all its now expected joys and sorrows — the joys of a band of new friends, for one thing. John and I had popped into a local and luxurious wine shop, Laithwaite’s of Borough Market, on Saturday afternoon for our dinner party wine, and I exclaimed, “Eva! What are you doing here?” For there was one of my Foster Lane ringers, a Hungarian wine expert of all things. We talked long and hard about Plain Bob and Foster Lane call changes, to John’s pretended boredom. He loves for me to be happy about ringing.
The sorrows are harder to explain.
Why on earth do I persist at a hobby that makes me so nervous? Part of my nerves is down to the Tower Captain’s constant presence behind my shoulder, correcting nearly every stroke. This method of teaching is definitely helpful, and I find that I can predict what corrections he is ready to make, which is all the more maddening because I shouldn’t DO things I know will be corrected! But ringing is one of those experiences in which every second or two you have the chance to improve. And when I do, it feels very satisfying.
And Monday was, as my Tower Captain put it afterward, an historic occasion because I accompanied everyone to the pub after! A nice glass of single malt, a bit of chat about Tom’s massive accomplishment of the afternoon — a full peal of four methods spliced together. His paperwork for the afternoon looked like a rainbow EKG. This image isn’t exactly what he rang, but it gives you a picture of how complex the instructions can be.
Then you have to keep in mind — there are no instructions at the actual moment of ringing, unlike lucky orchestras who get such helpful music set in front of them!
There was no time to breathe, however, because Tuesday morning brought us to an all-important day for John’s beloved building project. Our thrilling architect from Paris and the project architect who works with him (I still have to keep the secret of his identity here, for the time being) came to London for a delicious and inventive lunch, and a challenging afternoon meeting at our English architect’s office. That evening, then, our Paris architect gave a simply stunning public lecture, and it was quite overwhelming to have “Reserved” seats in the front row, listening to his descriptions of his pro bono work, his beautiful private homes, his inventive and clever public buildings. I can’t wait till I can share all the details with you — but it’s all still rather secret right now.
At an elegant bar after the talk, we sat late over lagers and brandy and felt excitement brewing. Our building WILL be built.
Again with no time to breathe, the next morning took us to Oxford to have lunch with Avery! The city sparkled in the early spring air.
We enjoyed our steak frites and whole sea bass at Quod, a very reliably delicious restaurant just up the High from Avery’s College. How I drank in all the little sights along the pavements as we walk along.
How wonderful to see Avery settled in with loads of hilarious stories to tell about her adventures. John fixed her computer, I filled her fridge and pantry and treat tin, and she gave us our birthday presents. My official favorite tea towel ever, and you know how many I have.
We shopped at the cool Covered Market, and the official Oxford University “stuff shop,” which somehow manages to be both mercantile and elegant — a very Oxford accomplishment.
We drove home feeling satisfied and relaxed, even though we miss her. She’s in the right place.
The next morning brought my introductory visit to my new Home-Start family. It has seemed like a very long gap between my last visit to my Richmond family in the chilly, short days of November, and now. But of course the office had to verify my records, my background check, my references, and find a family that would respond to my skills (whatever those might be).
As always, it is a potpourri of emotions to visit a family in need of support — I swallow hard at the fragility of their security, but rejoice in the way families find a way to love each other deeply in the face of trauma and hardship. Feeling a little hand in mine, totally trusting after an instant’s introduction, is always a lesson in humanity’s default setting of love. It will be a challenge to find what they most need, and how I can give it.
I knew it was going to be a painful juxtaposition to attend our Residents’ Meeting of our fellow Bankside neighbors that evening. This bizarre event took place in the adjacent office building, the Blue Fin Building of BBC drama filming fame (honestly, it seems to be the location for every political/crime/journalism programme we have seen since we moved here). For starters, they bottle their own water.
Seriously.
The meeting began with a heated debate over what has become of the baskets of croissants and bananas and tangerines that used to live on the concierge desk in the lobby. It transpired, through much discussion with the harrassed building managing agents, that these free treats had been supplied by a third-party exercise in lunacy to the tune of £18,000 a year.
“I’ll supply them for half that,” John offered instantly. This jest was received in grim silence. After all, we’re only lowly renters, at the meeting through the invitation of our landlords who KNEW how much we would revel in the personalities on display, and the idiocy of the “issues” that would demand serious attention.
Like the shocking delay in window washing, and the importance of making sure the perimeter gates are locked promptly at 8 p.m. to prevent the hoi polloi from soiling our internal pavements.
It was an awesome parade of objectionable privilege and lack of perspective. I wouldn’t have missed it for the world. And the building was well worth a visit.
The next day was a red-letter one because my great friend Catrina and her husband Joseph came to visit! All the way from Philadelphia. We met at John’s beloved plot of dirt, and as always, the location and the insanity of our hopes were reflected in their eyes — visitors always have this reaction.
With all the pressure and complexity of the planning process, it’s always good just to stand there, and appreciate what we have, and feel once more the certainty that someday, somehow, there will be a home there.
We came home for yet another crab tart (I was on a roll with that recipe). There is just about nothing I love more than standing in my kitchen with John and beloved guests on the other side of the counter, eating the olives Avery brought us from her summer holiday in Greece, sipping cocktails, chatting nonstop about all the people and ideas that we share. Except when I get so involved in conversation that I find myself pouring the cream over the crab tart WITHOUT having mixed in the eggs that would make it a custard!
“Oh no!” I gasp. “AND I don’t have enough eggs.”
It was but the work of a moment for John to pop over to the “everything store” downstairs for eggs, and for Joseph to calm me, bringing over a plate to hold on top of the tart, to hold the crab back while the cream poured harmlessly back out. That is a damn forgiving recipe, because the tart was quite perfect.
As was the whole evening.
In the morning they met me at Foster Lane for their first visit to a bell chamber, and their first exposure to the insanity that is my hobby.
“Stop clipping the fifth! That’s a capital offense!” Tom the Tower Captain hissed from his usual position behind me. “You’re practically in 4 and a half position. Stay off the second!”
Finally the session was over. “This was like Boot Camp,” I moaned. Tom smiled indulgently.
Over a rather lackluster omelette at the Albion minutes later, Catrina and Joseph asked wonderful questions about the ringing, which involved placing all our water glasses plus juice glasses in a circle and my explaining the English peculiarity of change-ringing. They are fans now, Joseph from an engineering perspective and Catrina from a pattern perspective, neither of which I possess.
“The other qualities to make a great ringer are apparently intense introvertedness, and a talent with mathematics,” I explained. “So I’m basically screwed.”
We went off to satisfy one of Catrina’s lifelong ambitions — to visit the Thames Barrier. This bizarrely apocalyptic structure is intended to save London from the flooding that is no doubt in our future (whether the Republicans believe in climate change or not). We stood in the freezing wind and gazed.
From the hillside where you first encounter this view, there’s a hilarious slide-option to get down to the water’s edge!
Down a long tunnel was a complex and beautiful schema of the River Thames in all its width and depth and height of tide. I can’t claim to have understood it as well as my companions did, but I did zoom in on our home location…
And Avery’s home location…
Seeing them both, connected by our beautiful river, made Avery seem closer, which is always to be wished.
A long walk later and we were at the Greenwich Observatory for another freezing walk to the famous line, and into the Camera Obscura, sitting down to a welcome coffee and more nonstop talk. We never seem to run out of things to talk about, a feature of Catrina’s endless attention span for new things, and her writerly appreciation of dialogue and wit. She’s such fun.
All too soon their visit was over. But there wasn’t time to be bored, because it was Election Day!
Democrats Abroad organised a polling station in Westminster to open at 6:30, so I prepped a nice stirfry dinner and left it all in readiness, and we strolled up the river and across Westminster Bridge, feeling our usual sense of awe and love at being in London.
The queue stretched all down and around the block — seeming to indicate that voter apathy isn’t a problem among the Democrats Abroad. We engaged in lively conversation with a Bernie Sanders supporter behind us — a transplanted New Yorker just like us — and then entered the polling room itself, complete with a three-piece band. I’m not making this up.
It was a relief, a welcome focus, to escape from the hideous circus of this election season to actually VOTE. It was a reminder of the purpose of the whole charade — we must actually choose a President. There was something mildly thrilling and awe-inspiring about it, akin to our feelings when we became UK citizens. Public life really is significant.
And because I really can’t leave you without a nice savory recipe, let me tell you about an innovation that really elevates one of my tried-and-true classics.
Slow-Braised Chicken Thighs with Cannellini Beans
(serves 4)
8 chicken thighs, skin on, bone in (do NOT substitute either skinless or boneless)
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 cup black oil-cured olives (not in brine)
1 medium white onion, sliced roughly
1 soup-size tin cannellini beans, drained
4 bay leaves (fresh if you can get them)
handful capers, drained
1/2 cup/120 ml each: white wine, olive oil, chicken stock, mixed
juice of 1 lemon
Arrange the thighs in a single layer with space between, in a large baking dish. Sprinkle over all the ingredients up to the liquids and tuck them in between the thighs. Pour over the mixed liquids and the lemon juice. Cover tightly with foil.
Braise at 350F/180C for two hours, then uncover and turn heat up to 425F/200 C for a further half hour. Serve with rice, noodles or steamed potatoes.
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The innovation here is the substitution of the cannellini beans for the mushrooms I usually use, but didn’t have last night. And guess what? The added texture and protein of the beans was gorgeous. Some floating on top got crisp, which was a delight.
I must love you and leave you, as I am headed off Choral Evensong at St Paul’s Cathedral, just a hop over the Millennium Bridge. I’ve always wanted to go, and tonight is the night. I will report.
Well crafted as always. I am particularly fond of the way you connect Avery to us via the Thames!
xo me
Merci!
Lovely! When are you coming to Chicago?
I wish!